Tag Archives: Carl Jung

Christina Sarich, Waking Times Are you playing the innocent child, full of unsullied love for the world, the jackal-like jester who laughs at others’ expense, the witch who has had her heart-broken so many times that she becomes cold and aloof, separating herself from society? Or how about the inventor and scientist, the visionary who … Continue reading →

[SL: This insightful article appeared some ago in my popular free ezine, DNA MONTHLY. Enjoy!] Subscribe for FREE Go to Archive Index Jed Shlackman The Paradox Of Perspective Any particular reality can be experienced and observed from countless different perspectives. These perspectives represent points of awareness with their own experiential context. Each perspective and experience … Continue reading →

Brendan D. Murphy Etymologically, the word consciousness derives from the words scire (to know) and cum or con (with). Consciousness is “to know with.” So if you, the persona, cognize (to know or be aware of), who are you cognizing with? Is there more to consciousness than the Freudian ego and unconscious? Mathematical physicist Roger … Continue reading →

Brendan D. Murphy Repeated ignorant or stubborn denial of the existence of certain powers does not keep them from existing—except for us! —Harold M. Sherman Have you ever noticed how closed-minded skeptics (CMS) rarely if ever have any experiences with the siddhis (psychic faculties) or “the paranormal” in general? Soviet research into psychokinesis (PK) involving … Continue reading →

Sol Luckman My earliest dreams were lucid ones of flying. I have a particularly vivid memory of soaring above my father’s tobacco fields where I used to hunt for arrowheads as a boy. There was a technique to flying in my dreams—akin to the way a condor rides thermal currents to corkscrew higher or lower. … Continue reading →

Milan Ljubincic From Poseidon’s mastery over the waters to the Dreamtime of the Australian Aboriginals, myths and legends are a hallmark of human culture. No matter where we were born, where we grew up and how our personal beliefs have ultimately evolved, we hold dear the myths that once shaped our world and create new … Continue reading →

Amy L. Lansky, PhD One piece of evidence for the holographic nature of nonstandard fields that have been proposed in recent years—the zero-point field (a candidate for the unified field), the psi field of psychic phenomena, Ervin Laszlo’s Akashic field, and the morphic field proposed by Rupert Sheldrake—is that they all share a common feature: … Continue reading →